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A small, strange building block.
Defiler is a small build tool framework with strange opinions. It was born out of a desire to redo the build process for my various personal websites. I wanted something that was very flexible, kept everything in memory as it was building, and could handle arbitrary dependencies between files so that when something changed, only the necessary files would be re-built.
Defiler's concept of a file is something that can come from one of two places: a physical file on the disk, or a virtual file that is generated by a callback you pass to Defiler. These two types of files differ slightly in how they are treated, but for the most part Defiler handles them both the same.
Files of both types are run through the gamut of transforms you register with Defiler. Each transform mutates the object representing the file in-place, and returns a promise indicating when it's finished.
Files' names can be changed as they're transformed, but the main way to refer to them will continue to be by their original path. This makes Defiler's job a bit easier, but is also probably more useful anyway. If you want to translate LESS into CSS and then inject it into a particular script, you're going to want to write import './path/to/file.less'
not import './path/to/file.css'
.
Files can be made to depend on other files, so that changes to a dependency cause the depender to be re-transformed. For physical files, the file does not need to be re-read from the disk before it can be re-transformed, as the original version is kept in memory.
Any transform or generator can also create additional files (which will then be run through all of the transforms). There's currently no way to make this additional file depend on any others for the purposes of automatic re-transformation, as the file would generally just be re-added when that transform or generator is run again.
If you need to write the transformed files to disk, that's its own transform. Just leave the file object untouched but write the file to disk in the appropriate location and return a promise indicating when you're done.
If you need some task management, that's outside the scope of this library. Just use await
and Promise.all
.
Copyright (c) 2017-2018 Conduitry
FAQs
A small, strange building block
The npm package defiler receives a total of 2 weekly downloads. As such, defiler popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that defiler demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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